Penn Alto Building

It is nine stories high and has a partial tenth floor penthouse.The name of the building remains the same, even though its usage has altered over time.Stevens & Company and built in 1921, was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1989.These variations may be due to the slight incline that the Penn Alto was built on.You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.This article about a property in Pennsylvania on the National Register of Historic Places is a stub.
U.S. National Register of Historic PlacesU.S. Historic districtContributing propertyAltoona, PennsylvaniaStevens, H.L., Co.landmarkdowntown Altoona, Pennsylvaniapenthouseresidential hotelH.L. Stevens & CompanyNational Register of Historic PlacesDowntown Altoona Historic DistrictNational Park ServiceCity of AltoonaHorseshoe CurveLakemont ParkLeap-The-DipsMishler TheatreLogan Valley MallRailroaders Memorial MuseumAllegheny Portage RailroadAltoona Transportation CenterAltoona–Blair County AirportAMTRANCathedral of the Blessed SacramentRoman Catholic DiocesePenn State AltoonaBishop Guilfoyle High SchoolAltoona Area School DistrictAltoona Area High SchoolUPMC AltoonaAltoona WorksBoyer CandiesSheetzAltoona CurvePeoples Natural Gas FieldAltoona MirrorWPSU-TVCreatePBS KidsWJAC-TVCharge!WWCP-TVWTAJ-TVMysteryWATM-TVWKBS-TVBounceScrippsW207CNW241CQW245CZW249DDW253CJW264BZW273BEW274BEW294AEWDBF-FMWHUN-FMWJSM-FMWNG589WRKY-FMUS National Register of Historic Places in PennsylvaniaKeeper of the RegisterHistoric districtHistory of the National Register of Historic PlacesProperty typesAlleghenyArmstrongBeaverBedfordBradfordButlerCambriaCameronCarbonCentreChesterClarionClearfieldClintonColumbiaCrawfordCumberlandDauphinDelawareFayetteForestFranklinFultonGreeneHuntingdonIndianaJeffersonJuniataLackawannaLancasterLawrenceLebanonLehighLuzerneLycomingMcKeanMercerMifflinMonroeMontgomeryMontourNorthamptonNorthumberlandPhiladelphiaPotterSchuylkillSnyderSomersetSullivanSusquehannaVenangoWarrenWashingtonWestmorelandWyomingPittsburghCenter CityNortheastNorthwestSouthwestEuropean archaeological sitesNative American archaeological sitesBridgescoveredNational Historic Landmarksproperty in Pennsylvania on the National Register of Historic Places